If God had wanted man to fly…
Those among you who know me well know that I think if/then logic is illogical, at best, because the logic structure is flawed. Generally, whatever follows if is currently not true, and, therefore, cannot justify then until if is modified to what is currently true, but then, why ask the question?
The then in this set-up “logic,” of course, is: [then] he [God] would have given him wings. The intended story is that God gave no man wings; we chose to make them ourselves, and also, therefore, chose the consequence. No wings have yet been genetically produced, it’s all the result of tool-making; an ability science once told us was unique to man.
Well, we know, now, that is not true, either, so, so much for “science,” which also once told us the Earth centered the universe. Y’all also know my thinking on that little gem.
Here’s the point. It isn’t IF God wanted man to fly, because he gave Adam and Eve, and therefore us, dominion, and that means he wanted us to decide if we wanted to fly, and would allow that, because by dominion he gave us free will, so it is our decision to think of, and act on making our wings, even of a tool variety.
Those among you who know me well know that I think if/then logic is illogical, at best, because the logic structure is flawed. Generally, whatever follows if is currently not true, and, therefore, cannot justify then until if is modified to what is currently true, but then, why ask the question?
The then in this set-up “logic,” of course, is: [then] he [God] would have given him wings. The intended story is that God gave no man wings; we chose to make them ourselves, and also, therefore, chose the consequence. No wings have yet been genetically produced, it’s all the result of tool-making; an ability science once told us was unique to man.
Well, we know, now, that is not true, either, so, so much for “science,” which also once told us the Earth centered the universe. Y’all also know my thinking on that little gem.
Here’s the point. It isn’t IF God wanted man to fly, because he gave Adam and Eve, and therefore us, dominion, and that means he wanted us to decide if we wanted to fly, and would allow that, because by dominion he gave us free will, so it is our decision to think of, and act on making our wings, even of a tool variety.